University of Colorado Law Review

Volume 74, Issue 4, Fall 2003

JUSTICE WHITE AND THE EXERCISE OF JUDICIAL POWER

A Symposium Sponsored by the Byron R. White Center
for the Study of American Constitutional Law
and the University of Colorado Law Review

Remembering Justice White
The Honorable Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Justice Byron R. White: His Legacy for the Twenty-First Century
William E. Nelson

Justice White and Judicial Review
Philip J. Weiser

Justice White and the Democratic-Republicans
Richard Cordray

Nearest to Legitimacy: Justice White and Strict Rational Basis Scrutiny
Michael Herz

Why Theories of Law Have Little or Nothing to Do With Judicial Restraint
Philip Soper

Two Cheers for Judicial Restraint:
Justice White and the Role of the Supreme Court

Dennis J. Hutchinson

The Populism of Justice Byron R. White: Media Cases and Beyond
Bernard W. Bell

Judging Reputation: Realism and Common Law
in Justice White's Defamation Jurisprudence

John C. P. Goldberg

Criminal Law and the Supreme Court:
An Essay on the Jurisprudence of Byron White

Kate Stith-Cabranes

Justice White and Legal Realism:
An Addendum to Professor Stith-Cabranes

The Honorable Louis F. Oberdorfer

Byron White, Federalism, and the "Greatest Generation(s)"
Martin S. Flaherty

Comment: A View From the Bench Regarding Byron White, Federalism,
and the "Greatest Generation(s)" by Professor Martin S. Flaherty
The Honorable James B. Loken

Justice White's Federalism: The (Sometimes) Conflicting Forces
of Nationalism, Pragmatism and Judicial Restraint

Allison H. Eid